1.n. A move in basketball in which a person jukes while bouncing the basketball from one hand to the other usually leaving the defender going in the opposite direction . It has become increasingly popular as of late due to talented users such as Allen Iverson, Tim Hardaway, And 1 team, etc.

Can be used in a positive or neutral sense to refer to an artist that has attained appeal beyond fans of the genre in which the artist started out. Can also be used in a negative sense that implies "selling out" to refer to the same artists or to artists who are attempting such a crossover. The negative connotation is most often used by purist fans or fellow performers within that genre. This term gained some prominence in early 1990s rap as some rappers 1) attempted to tailor their acts to white suburbia, 2) employed what was regarded by some as an excessive amount of R&B on records, or 3) engaged in collaborations with heavy metal artists, in the style of Ice-T. The negative version of the term is now used less often in rap circles, as many mainstream rappers have blended the avaricious hustling image of street culture with the rampant consumerism of white suburbia so as to attain both crossover status and street cred.

Black Jeff Foxworthy - "If you used to front one of the most innovative hip hop groups of the early nineties and you find yourself in a Hype Williams video, you might be a crossover."

A mixture of an SUV and a car. A reletively new introduction to the automobile worlds- but all these car companies did was bring back "station wagons" and call them something different- and stupid people are buying it!